Bloated stomach? Learn about the common causes of stomach bloating and discomfort, as well as effective techniques for relieving symptoms and preventing recurrence.
Feeling bloated? You’re not alone. Abdominal bloating and gas are among the most common digestive complaints that doctors hear from patients.
A recent survey that included close to 90,000 people found that about 14% of all Americans reported experiencing bloating in the previous seven days. And among bloating sufferers, close to 60% reported never having sought medical care for this problem. In other words, most people who experience bloating seem to have resigned themselves to just dealing with it on their own.
“Bloating” is term that people often use to refer to different experiences. For some, “bloating” actually means “distension,” or a waistline that protrudes significantly from its more typical, flatter baseline. This type of distended belly bloating bothers some people largely because of how it looks. They may think a protruding tummy makes them look “pregnant.” Others are frustrated when that swollen stomach sticks around even after weight loss.
But for others, bloating is less about looks and more about discomfort. “Bloating” in this case can often refer to a feeling of discomfort and overfullness that is not commensurate with what or how much they eat. This subjective feeling of fullness, tightness or discomfort may or may not actually be accompanied by a visibly distended abdomen.
Often, bloating can be accompanied by other gastrointestinal symptoms, and these can offer clues as to the nature and origin of the bloating. For example, patients may describe belching, nausea, early fullness or heartburn that accompany their bloated bellies, suggesting the nature of their bloating originates with a problem in the stomach. Others may describe flatulence (farting), lower abdominal gas pains or cramping or irregular bowel movements that accompany their bloated bellies, suggesting the nature of their bloating originates in the intestines.
If you’re ready to get rid of abdominal bloating, here’s what you should know.
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What Is Stomach Bloating?
The terms bloating and abdominal distension are often used interchangeably. Technically, bloating is a temporary feeling of fullness, usually due to intestinal gas, while abdominal distension refers to a visible, measurable increase in the stomach’s size. Passing gas, belching or having a bowel movement may or may not provide relief.
Bloating and distention are symptoms, however, not conditions of their own. There are dozens of conditions that may be accompanied by bloating and/or distension, ranging from lactose intolerance and constipation to more serious conditions like colorectal or ovarian cancer. While many causes of bloating are caused by or worsened by certain foods, not all bloating has a specific dietary culprit underlying. While most causes of bloating do originate somewhere in the digestive system, some, like hypothyroidism or endometriosis, do not.
All of this is to say that solutions to bloating are not one-size-fits-all. Social media is brimming with oversimplified infographics offering lists of foods purported to either cause or cure bloating. And these may or may not be relevant to the type of bloating you experience. If you’re committed to getting to the bottom of your bloating, you and your doctor or GI-trained dietitian will need to do some detective work.
What Causes a Bloated Stomach?
Dr. Hardeep Singh, a gastroenterologist with St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, California, says bloating can develop from several causes. Dietary problems are the most common, he says, with intolerance of certain food products leading the way. A food intolerance, or food sensitivity, means your digestive system can’t break down specific foods, which can lead to excess gas and bloating. “Typical intolerances include dairy, but people can be intolerant to almost anything,” he says.
Dietary causes of bloating
Other causes of stomach bloating
Another type of bloating may not be linked to what you eat but rather how you eat: swallowing air, or aerophagia. Aerophagia can result from eating too fast, talking while eating, chewing gum or chugging water – though it may also occur during exercise, sleeping or as the result of subconscious swallowing tics, especially among people who experience anxiety.
Swallowing air from eating too fast, chewing gum or using a straw is among the most common eating-related causes of bloating, says Cassie Vanderwall, a registered dietitian in the department of clinical nutrition at UW Health in Wisconsin.
When it comes to aerophagia, carbonated drinks may be friend or foe, depending on the person. Drinking soda or seltzer can make some people swallow excess air, thereby worsening their bloating. However, other people find that fizzy drinks help alleviate their bloating by inducing belching, and therefore actually relieving pressure caused by gas buildup in the stomach.
Farting and belching are also closely related to bloating. Belching or burping is caused by swallowed air that collects in the stomach. Passing rectal gas, or flatulence, is usually a combination of swallowed air and gas caused by bacteria in your colon forming around undigested carbohydrates.
Another common causes of bloating is constipation. If you’re bothered by a rock-solid stomach with abdominal distension that builds as the day progresses and is relieved – or partially relieved – by pooping, constipation is a very likely cause. People who suffer from constipation-related bloating typically complain of feeling bloated, distended and extremely flatulent every night, regardless of what they’ve eaten for dinner. With constipation, normal intestinal gas gets trapped behind slow-moving poop and can build up, causing gas pain.
Constipation-related bloating generally does not respond adequately to elimination diets. When the stool burden – or amount of retained stool in the colon – is exceptionally high, eating very high fiber foods may actually make this type of bloating worse, not better. This is because all the fiber that goes in must come out, and if the bowel is already retaining a backlog of previously-consumed fiber, putting more dietary residue into a clogged pipeline will only make the problem worse.
There are many possibilities when it comes to causes for bloating. Conditions that cause bloating include:
Stomach Bloating Explained
You can feel overfull when you hit up against the limits of your stomach’s natural ability to expand, or stretch, in response to eating a meal. Your stomach muscle is about the size of a fist at rest, but its muscular walls are designed to expand quite a bit to accommodate large amounts of food; this function is called “gastric accommodation.” Until the stomach completes its work of churning and breaking down food with digestive enzymes, it’s natural to feel temporarily full after a substantial lunch or supper, though overdoing it with portions can make you feel uncomfortably full.
In some cases, however, the stomach may have impaired stretchiness that makes you feel as though you’ve overeaten even when you’ve eaten only a modest amount; this is called impaired gastric accommodation. Therefore, one of the first steps in relieving this type of bloating is to consume smaller portions more frequently rather than fewer, larger meals. There are some over-the-counter herbal remedies that can help with this type of bloating as well.
Visible distension – or a “pregnant” looking appearance – can often result from abnormal nerve reflexes that govern how the diaphragm and abdominal wall muscles coordinate in response to food or gas moving through the gastrointestinal tract. These abnormal reflexes can result in an exaggerated protrusion of the abdomen after eating, drinking liquids or harboring even “normal” amounts of intestinal gas. This type of neuromuscular dysfunction is sometimes treated with a therapy called biofeedback, or in some cases with nerve modulating medications.
Of course, a belly that isn’t perfectly flat 24 hours per day is perfectly normal; our abdominal walls are stretchy by design so that they can accommodate multiple organs, the varying contents of our digestive tracts and bladders, and for some people, the uterus as well. Gestating children would be an impossibility if the abdominal wall was not pliable!
Sometimes, patients embarking on weight-management programs who don’t develop the six-pack abs they’ve been striving for may complain of bloating, when that’s not really the issue, Vanderwall notes. Similarly, people with body dysmorphia, a mental health condition characterized by hyper-fixation on perceived flaws in one’s appearance, will often complain of ‘bloating’ or distension that is not necessarily perceptible to others.
Latest Bloating Contributor: COVID-19
COVID-19 infection can cause digestive problems as well.
“With active COVID, we have seen patients with some GI symptoms: nausea, vomiting, bloating and those kinds of things,” says Dr. Greg Vanichkachorn, director of Mayo Clinic’s COVID Activity Rehabilitation Program. That can happen with almost any viral illness, he notes, like stomach flu, “which can cause substantial stomach and digestive issues.”
Medications to treat active COVID-19 may contribute. “Some of the medicines we use can definitely affect the gut,” Vanichkachorn says. “Some antibiotics used early on for complicated infections can destroy the gut bacteria.” Steroids and other drugs can affect the GI system as well as the rest of the body, causing abdominal pain, bloating, constipation and food sensitivity.
Now, long COVID is creating persistent gastrointestinal woes. “What has been more surprising is that as we have gotten more into evaluating long COVID, we have seen that there are a fair number of patients who have been reporting ongoing GI problems,” Vanichkachorn says. “In some studies, 16% of patients report having new GI symptoms even 100 days or more after their infection, things like abdominal pain, constipation, vomiting and diarrhea. We’ve also heard about problems with excessive gas and the bloating sensation.”
Some patients with long COVID continue to experience GI symptoms for eight months and more on follow-up, according to an evidence review published in August 2022.
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Long COVID and Food Sensitivities
New food sensitivities may arise in patients after COVID-19.“So they didn’t have any problems consuming, say, dairy products or, or have troubles with sugar,” Vanichkachorn says. But afterward, they find themselves having a very limited diet that they can tolerate. We have some patients who are just eating Cheerios and yogurt and that’s all they can really stomach.”
Ongoing problems with taste and smell can also throw off patients’ appetites, he notes. “If we’re not careful, it can really get into a situation where they’re not eating enough and developing malnutrition, with electrolyte problems.”
Patients with long COVID describe a constellation of GI symptoms. “It can have a lot of functional impacts,” Vanichkachorn says. “I have some patients who, for example, have really severe, bloody stool, diarrhea and incontinence issues that keep them from leaving home and going to work.”
Figuring out how to treat COVID-related GI symptoms is an issue. “Most of the time we’ll start with things like a bland diet, probiotics and adequate hydration,” Vanichkachorn says. Probiotics may help promote the regrowth of healthy gut bacteria, he says, although patients’ results have been mixed. “But it’s worth a shot now.”
Such patients undergo a gastroenterology evaluation. “They go through testing like colonoscopies to see if there’s anything else going on, or testing to see if there are problems with how the gut moves because we’ve seen that occur in neuropathy issues, which we’ve also seen quite a bit with long COVID, too.”
Whether and when GI symptoms like bloating resolve are uncertain. “Some get resolution, but the patients I have right now who have these significant GI issues really seem to be not resolving with time,” Vanichkachorn says. “So I’m not comfortable telling people: OK, this is going to go away with time. I think we need to have more research on the GI illness for those with long COVID and hopefully develop some treatments.”
Which Foods Affect Bloating?
Some problem foods are more likely to cause bloating, while other foods may help prevent it.
How Do Body Type and Weight Relate to Bloating?
Carrying extra belly fat can contribute to a more visibly distended waistline, but this is distinct from “bloating,” which is not a function of fat deposition or weight gain.
Possible culprits for excess abdominal fat include cigarette smoking and chronic alcohol consumption. Smoking affects where fat is deposited in the body, tending to favor the stomach. Heavy drinking has a similar effect, particularly in people assigned male at birth. A so-called “beer gut” can really occur with any type of alcohol used in excess.
In people assigned female at birth, having an apple-shaped body type means fat is more concentrated around the midsection, as opposed to pear-shaped body types. For people who experience menopause, the distribution of fat can also change and result in more concentration in the midsection
Contrary to popular diet claims, no foods or diets can target fat loss from the belly specifically. When you lose weight, you’ll lose body fat from all over. “Spot reduction” is not really a thing when it comes to weight loss.
How Does Sodium Relate to Bloating?
Often, people use the term “bloated” to refer to the puffy appearance they acquire following a salty meal or drinking too much alcohol. In these cases, the swollen appearance results from fluid retention within various tissues of the body, and often concentrates in the face, hands, fingers, legs and feet. It typically self-resolves within hours to a day when consuming lower sodium diet and drinking adequate water to expedite excretion of extra sodium from the system via the urine. You may even be able to speed up this process by drinking a high potassium beverage like coconut water.
Fluid retention is not the same thing as bloating or distention; the correct term for it is actually edema, which is not generally caused by problems in the digestive system except in the cases of advanced liver disease or a somewhat uncommon intestinal condition called protein losing enteropathy.
Cintaa Elder Care Coral Springs, Margate, Tamarac, Deerfield Beach Florida
How Can You Get Rid of Bloating?
You don’t have to live with bloating, and there’s plenty you can do to alleviate bothersome or persistent symptoms. Trying to identify the nature of your bloating – starting with whether it seems digestively-driven or not, and if so, whether it seems more likely to originate in your stomach or your bowels – is a great place to start.
It’s possible that serious medical conditions may be the underlying cause of bloating, so the bottom line is: If issues persist, see a gastroenterologist, Singh says.
“People need to realize that this is not normal,” Vanichkachorn emphasizes. “So if patients are worried about any symptom, whether it may be related to COVID or not, they should go ahead and try to find care.”
Cintaa Elder Care Coral Springs, Margate, Tamarac, Deerfield Beach Florida